ChatGPT is losing some of its hype, as traffic falls for the third month in a row::August marked the third month in a row that the number of monthly visits to ChatGPT’s website worldwide was down, per data from Similarweb.

  • 👍Maximum Derek👍@discuss.tchncs.de
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    10 months ago

    I’m starting to think I’m incompatible with GPT. Code that’s laughably wrong (like sticking in things that aren’t even in the language), DM advice that I could get walking down a greeting card isle, and explanations that would get a Wikipedia editor sent to the firing squad.

    • orclev@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      Nah, that sounds about right. This is just the natural result of people actually trying to use GPT for all the things they were told it would be able to do, and now discovering that was in fact all bullshit. The LLMs are and always have been massively overhyped and oversold on what they can do. Sadly this won’t stop the corporate executives from trying to use them to replace workers, although when that effort eventually face plants they’ll just quietly re-hire a bunch of people and find some middle manager to blame for their failure. This is was and always will be merely a productivity tool to automate some repetitive work, but it still needs someone to review and clean up its output. It’s not “replace someone doing 40 hours of work a week”, it’s “allow someone to do what used to take 40 hours in 35 hours instead”.

      Sadly the most impact this is going to have is on spammers and scammers, who can now automate generating their garbage since it never mattered that any of that crap was accurate or not, merely that on a casual glance it looks reasonable.

      • superkret@feddit.de
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        10 months ago

        It’s not “replace someone doing 40 hours of work a week”, it’s “allow someone to do what used to take 40 hours in 35 hours instead”.

        That someone will then still have to work 40 hours for the same pay, but be more productive, so then 1 in 8 of these someones can be fired.

        • Womble@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          The exact same statement applies to computers, mechanical looms and the plough. Thats how technology works.

      • penguin@sh.itjust.works
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        10 months ago

        I agree. I think people are just missing the point. It’s really far from being able to replace a worker.

        It’s current capabilities at best can help that worker be slightly faster at certain things. It’s akin to a type of search engine.

      • 👍Maximum Derek👍@discuss.tchncs.de
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        10 months ago

        Yeah. There are a lot of shitty marketing ideas that suddenly become profitable if you don’t have to pay people to generate the content it needs. Honestly I’ve had a couple of those ideas over the years and I’m glad I’m no longer in a position to propose them to anyone.

    • Sacha@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      When I first started messing with it, I was kind of neat and fun. I like making characters so I was using it for like story prompts and general outlines. Some were better than others, but it was neat for some inspiration and fleshing out. I never took it’s outputs 1:1.

      But when I messed with it again recently. It was a lot worse. Like it ignored parts of my prompt. Like as an example a prompt was about a romance story, but the story was about character A and their family. The love interest character was barely a footnote and could have been removed entirely and nothing would have changed with the story outlines it was giving me.

      I thought maybe it doesnt like romance prompts, so I tried less specific and more broad prompts from there, and it was the same thing of just… not outputting what I was asking it to. It got worse and worse and sometimes wouldn’t output anything at all.

    • Steeve@lemmy.ca
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      10 months ago

      Not sure what language you’re coding in, but I’ve found GPT-4 incredibly helpful for coding in C++ and Python.